本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛Lee Greenberg, CanWest News Service
Published: Friday, May 11, 2007 Article tools
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Font: * * * * TORONTO - Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty gave in Thursday to three weeks of unrelenting pressure by opposition MPPs and requested an investigation by the Auditor General into an alleged Liberal slush fund.
McGuinty however, refused to offer his opponents the head of Citizenship and Immigration Minister Mike Colle, the man responsible for a $32-million spending program that critics suggest was used to reward Liberal-friendly organizations.
"I am not prepared to do that," he told the assembly at Queen's Park. "I have had the opportunity to work very closely with Minister Colle. He is exceptional in terms of his work ethic, his dedication, his determination, his motivation and he has my continuing confidence."
The unnamed spending program dispersed a host of suspect grants, according to opposition MPPs, including $200,000 to an Iranian-Canadian group which boasted a Liberal election candidate, a Liberal riding association president and a longtime friend of Liberal Finance Minister Greg Sorbara on its board. All seven members of the board were Liberal donors.
Similar allegations were made about a Bengali group and a Chinese group, which boasted a one-time advisor to Colle as a director.
Colle has admitted the spending program, which has been tweaked in the wake of the controversy, had no formal application process, selection criteria or auditing provisions. The funds were not publicized and the program was unnamed.
Opponents labelled the program a political slush fund and suggest it was used to curry favour among ethnic voters.
While they welcomed Thursday's announcement, opposition MPPs say the investigation is above all an exercise in damage control.
"The government is obviously hoping they can make this go away now," said New Democrat leader Howard Hampton. "They're hoping this will go away and when the auditor's report comes in the hot days of July or August, they'll be able to bury it."
Conservative leader John Tory commended McGuinty on making what he said was a good decision after weeks of stubbornly resisting calls for an investigation.
"We've ended up in the right place," he told reporters. "Three weeks late, but we've ended up in the right place."
Tory also defended Conservative MPP Bob Runciman, who, in asking Thursday for reassurances that all appropriate evidence has been preserved, remarked he had seen a shredding truck outside government offices just one day earlier.
McGuinty said the former solicitor general's question was "dangerously close" to crossing a line.
"I think he asked a valid question," Tory told reporters, "which is what are we going to do to make sure all the evidence is preserved during the course of the auditors investigation, including emails and everything else."
Both opposition leaders persisted in their calls for Colle to step aside while the Auditor General performs his investigation.
"It's just completely bizarre how he can stay in his office as a cabinet minister while under investigation by the Auditor General," said Hampton.
The Auditor General's investigation comes just four months before a provincial election campaign which appears to be taking an increasingly nasty tone.
Ottawa Citizen更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
Published: Friday, May 11, 2007 Article tools
Printer friendly
Font: * * * * TORONTO - Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty gave in Thursday to three weeks of unrelenting pressure by opposition MPPs and requested an investigation by the Auditor General into an alleged Liberal slush fund.
McGuinty however, refused to offer his opponents the head of Citizenship and Immigration Minister Mike Colle, the man responsible for a $32-million spending program that critics suggest was used to reward Liberal-friendly organizations.
"I am not prepared to do that," he told the assembly at Queen's Park. "I have had the opportunity to work very closely with Minister Colle. He is exceptional in terms of his work ethic, his dedication, his determination, his motivation and he has my continuing confidence."
The unnamed spending program dispersed a host of suspect grants, according to opposition MPPs, including $200,000 to an Iranian-Canadian group which boasted a Liberal election candidate, a Liberal riding association president and a longtime friend of Liberal Finance Minister Greg Sorbara on its board. All seven members of the board were Liberal donors.
Similar allegations were made about a Bengali group and a Chinese group, which boasted a one-time advisor to Colle as a director.
Colle has admitted the spending program, which has been tweaked in the wake of the controversy, had no formal application process, selection criteria or auditing provisions. The funds were not publicized and the program was unnamed.
Opponents labelled the program a political slush fund and suggest it was used to curry favour among ethnic voters.
While they welcomed Thursday's announcement, opposition MPPs say the investigation is above all an exercise in damage control.
"The government is obviously hoping they can make this go away now," said New Democrat leader Howard Hampton. "They're hoping this will go away and when the auditor's report comes in the hot days of July or August, they'll be able to bury it."
Conservative leader John Tory commended McGuinty on making what he said was a good decision after weeks of stubbornly resisting calls for an investigation.
"We've ended up in the right place," he told reporters. "Three weeks late, but we've ended up in the right place."
Tory also defended Conservative MPP Bob Runciman, who, in asking Thursday for reassurances that all appropriate evidence has been preserved, remarked he had seen a shredding truck outside government offices just one day earlier.
McGuinty said the former solicitor general's question was "dangerously close" to crossing a line.
"I think he asked a valid question," Tory told reporters, "which is what are we going to do to make sure all the evidence is preserved during the course of the auditors investigation, including emails and everything else."
Both opposition leaders persisted in their calls for Colle to step aside while the Auditor General performs his investigation.
"It's just completely bizarre how he can stay in his office as a cabinet minister while under investigation by the Auditor General," said Hampton.
The Auditor General's investigation comes just four months before a provincial election campaign which appears to be taking an increasingly nasty tone.
Ottawa Citizen更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net